People that say this pad isn’t good for valorant don’t have enough experience with it. I noticed an instant improvement in my micro adjustments due to no friction but flicking became a lot harder since there was no stopping power until I developed enough muscle memory to know when to stop. Now flicks feel effortless in comparison to how they did on my Hien. All in all skypad > any other mousepad if you have natural stopping power
Depending on the game, for like: COD, Battlefield, Maybe Overwatch? Probably the skypad. But for games like CS:GO, Valorant, more precision based games, 100% the Hien
People that say this pad isn’t good for valorant don’t have enough experience with it. I noticed an instant improvement in my micro adjustments due to no friction but flicking became a lot harder since there was no stopping power until I developed enough muscle memory to know when to stop. Now flicks feel effortless in comparison to how they did on my Hien. All in all skypad > any other mousepad if you have natural stopping power
Real
Which is better in your opinion? because i hate how my artisan slowed down after 2 months even tho i washed it pretty well
Depending on the game, for like: COD, Battlefield, Maybe Overwatch? Probably the skypad. But for games like CS:GO, Valorant, more precision based games, 100% the Hien
@@dynofrags would you recomend the 2.0 for csgo, valorant since it is claimed to be slower than the 3.0?
Bro, is 2.0 faster glide than 3.0
@@Torestar1 uh idk, but for games like valo and cs skypad is not good
@@dynofrags I use skypad for csgo and valorant, its great but if you arent used to a no control setup just go for artisan.
awesome
yes sirr I just need corepads/tiger ice skates and we gon be gliding :o
are they the same on speed
Not even close even when both fully new Skylad feels like it has 0 grip and hien has like quite a bit comparatively